I've been a French Press user for some time now and I've recently switched over to the pour over method to make my daily cup(s). However, I'm having some trouble nailing down the perfect cup. Some help would be very welcome. I read the "how to" but it left me with a few questions.

In the "how to" it says to fill up the filter with hot water and stir the slurry. Problem is, my porcelain melitta is NOT 16 oz. especially filled with grounds, so filling it with water to the top means I've got to fill it up a few times to get a full 16 oz cup of coffee. This means that the filter bed gets flat and kind of clogged instead of nicely lining the sides of the cone filters (which I've read in other places is optimal).

Near boiling water seems to over extract my grounds and I'm left with astringently bitter coffee... maybe my grind is not right?

I'm currently finding that a grind that would be used for an automatic drip is about the right size. Finer than French Press, but coarser than my Moka Pot likes, is this correct?

Any tips really would be appreciated. I don't see why such a simple method shouldn't produce coffee at least as good as my French Press, but it just isn't happening yet... :(

Now, it is for a Hario, not a Melitta. But principle should be the same. I don't know how close this is to the instructions here.

I bought my Son in Law, who used to use a Melitta, a kettle. I bought the Hario, but there are more out there now as pour over became more popular. At first he thought it was funny. Then he started experimenting and found it did give him better control and he uses it religiously now.

In the "how to" it says to fill up the filter with hot water and stir the slurry. Problem is, my porcelain melitta is NOT 16 oz. especially filled with grounds, so filling it with water to the top means I've got to fill it up a few times to get a full 16 oz cup of coffee. This means that the filter bed gets flat and kind of clogged instead of nicely lining the sides of the cone filters (which I've read in other places is optimal).

Near boiling water seems to over extract my grounds and I'm left with astringently bitter coffee... maybe my grind is not right?

I'm currently finding that a grind that would be used for an automatic drip is about the right size. Finer than French Press, but coarser than my Moka Pot likes, is this correct?

Any tips really would be appreciated. I don't see why such a simple method shouldn't produce coffee at least as good as my French Press, but it just isn't happening yet... :(

I wouldn't suggest just filling up your Melitta and stirring the slurry. Stirring it gently isn't a bad notion, but you can over-agitate the grounds, and the more important thing is the speed of the pour and extraction. The water should be just off the boil (200F-210F), and the grind should be in between french press coarse and super fine, yes (it should feel about like sand). The pour is really important. Pour just enough to barely wet the grounds first, and let it bloom for about 45 seconds (For coffee within a week of the roast date, do 60). After that, you want to pour it slow and steady in the center of the grounds so that you pour the rest of the water in about 2-2.5 minutes. You'll want to avoid the edges, as the water will just flow in between the filter and the dripper and give you underextracted tastes (small circles in the center works well). Pouring too quickly will make the water rise about the grounds and do the same thing.

What ratio of water to coffee are you using? I do about 28g of coffee for 415g of water. That's what Intelligentsia recommended, and I really liked it, so I stuck with it. You may find that this isn't the right ratio for your palette, but it may be a good starting place.

It's something that takes some tweaking and practicing, but a beautiful cup when you do it right. Good luck!

I do manual pourover a little different than Dave.I pretty much do the same but I keep the slurry of coffee grounds at a consistent level, if that means pouring to the side of the cone to keep the grounds in the center, so be it. The important thing is that once you are brewing after the bloom, you want to keep as much of the ground coffee wet and in a slurry form. At the end of the brew, if your grinds line the cone and have a cone shape, you had a water level too high, you want the bed of spent coffee to be flat in the cone to extract evenly from the whole bed of coffee. If the coffee lines the side of the cone, you are over extracting the coffee at the bottom of the cone and under extracting the coffee on the sides of the cone. HEY, play with it and do what tastes best for you!

In real life, my name isWayne P.Anything I post is personal opinion and is only worth as much as anyone else's personal opinion. YMMV!

I've been doing all manual drip for several years using a cheap #4 filter cone brewed straight into my 20oz travel mug.

A moderately coarse grind works best for me. I've been tweaking over the years and find that +40 relative to the zero point on my Rocky is about right. That's not quite FP coarse. My pour completes in just under 4 minutes. The slowest part is the end where I'm waiting for the last of the water to pass through the compacted grounds in the bottom.

I don't stir but agitate the grounds with my pour. I start with a small amount to bloom, then add more water to get a bigger bloom but stop well short of the top of the filter. I let that subside a little then pour in circles alternating between the middle and the edges. Rinse and repeat. My goal is to keep almost all of the grounds wet and extracting as much as possible.

There is certainly no "one size fits all approach." Try out mine (mostly stolen from Intelli and Stumptown), try out Cal's, heck, make up your own! The important thing is that you like what it produces.

Hmm. Thanks for all the great replies. Seems like I've been doing things wrong. I've been not doing the small amount of water at the beginning for the "bloom" and I've been pouring too much in at once which apparently makes the water just run down the sides and not through the grounds. Also, it sounds like my grounds are too fine.

I'm not sure what my grounds to water ratio is. I use about 2-3 over filled table spoons of grounds for 16 oz of water. Not sure what that equates to in weight, but I'm curious to find out. Time to make my experimentation more scientific.

I would recommend a kitchen scale to help weigh coffee and water. I purchased one when I first began making pour over coffee and my wife and I use it for cooking as well. The Jennings CJ4000 is a great scale and one that I would recommend if you go that route.

Weighing coffee and water is a great way to go. Again, it's possible to brew without weight, but weight makes everything a bit easier. I use 60g/1L as a base ratio and adjust accordingly. To find the proper dose for a brew, start with the amount of water. If you want a 500ml brew, just multiply by 0.060 to get your coffee dose in g.

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